MAN07 VOMS Replication
Document control
Property | Value |
---|---|
Title | MAN07 VOMS Replication |
Policy Group | Operations Management Board (OMB) |
Document status | Approved |
Procedure Statement | How to implement a MySQL VOMS server replication |
Owner | SDIS team |
Introduction
In this manual we will show you how to implement a MySQL VOMS server
replication: you need one master server, on which you can perform writing
operations, and you can have from 1 to “n” replica servers that will work in
read-only mode. In such a scenario you can do a whatever intervention on one of
the servers without breaking the service, i.e. proxies creation and
grid-mapfile
downloads: just the users registration and the usual VOs
management operations might be forbidden during an intervention on the master
server (because it is the only server in writing mode).
This failover procedure is simply based on MySQL replication therefore every MySQL setting is referred to the current MySQL version (5.0.77 in this moment)
Settings on the MASTER SERVER
In order to allow the replica server to read the master database, you have to
create an user with which the slave will connect to the master. Suppose the
replica hostname is vomsrep.cnaf.infn.it
, the user is bonjovi
and the
password is always
. What you have to launch on the master server is:
$ mysql -p -e "grant super, reload, replication slave, replication client \
on *.* to bonjovi@'vomsrep.cnaf.infn.it' identified by 'always'" ;
Then for each DB (VO) you want to replicate, you have to assign the right permissions, by launching:
mysql -p -e "grant select, lock tables on voms_myvo.* to \
bonjovi@'vomsrep.cnaf.infn.it'"
Eventually you have to modify the file /etc/my.cnf
by adding the following
lines into the section [mysqld]
:
log-bin=mysql-bin
server-id=1
innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1
sync_binlog=1
It is important that on the master server it is set server-id=1
: it is the
identification number that distinguish a master from its several slaves (each
slave will have a unique number starting from 2)
For example, the content of my.cnf
file may appear like this:
# less /etc/my.cnf
[mysqld]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql
socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
user=mysql
# Default to using old password format for compatibility with mysql 3.x
# clients (those using the mysqlclient10 compatibility package).
old_passwords=1
max_connections = 800
log-bin=mysql-bin server-id=1
innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1
sync_binlog=1
# Disabling symbolic-links is recommended to prevent assorted security risks;
# to do so, uncomment this line: # symbolic-links=0
[mysqld_safe]
log-error=/var/log/mysqld.log
pid-file=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
At this point, you have to restart MySQL, by launching:
$ service mysqld restart
In order to check that on the master side the mechanism is working, you can launch for example:
mysql> show master status;
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
| File | Position | Binlog_Do_DB | Binlog_Ignore_DB |
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
| mysql-bin.000001 | 24844 | | |
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Eventually, through the web interface, in the ACL section of each VO you want to replicate, add an entry granting all the permissions to the slave server:
- select “a non VO member” from the menu
- fill in the replica server DN and a reference email address
- select “all” for the permissions and tick the “Propagate entry to children contexts” option
In this way, when the slave server copies the DB, it will have the proper permissions on acting on the DB. Moreover, in order to avoid the sending of notification to the email address you filled in before, connect to the MySQL database and do the following:
mysql> use voms_myvo;
mysql> update admins set email_address=NULL where \
email_address="what you filled before";
Settings on the SLAVE SERVER
Install a VOMS server as usual, configuring the VOs you want to replicate: keep in mind that every modification done on the slave DB breaks the replica mechanism, so that on this server disable the users registration, by setting the yaim variable:
VOMS_ADMIN_WEB_REGISTRATION_DISABLE=true
Then ask the VO managers to not perform any action on the slave server web interface.
Then launch the following scripts:
- first_replica.sh for the first database you want to replicate or in the case it is the only one
- next_replicas.sh for the next databases (one database for each launch)
For both the scripts, set the following variables:
master_host
,master_mysql_user
,master_mysql_pwd
that refers to the master server and to the user created on itmysql_username_admin
andmysql_password_admin
that refers to the slave
Example:
voms_database="" # VOMS database (leave unset)
master_host="voms.cnaf.infn.it" # Master hostname
master_mysql_user="bonjovi" # Master MySQL admin user for replication
master_mysql_pwd="always" # Master MySQL admin pass for replication user
master_log_file="" # Master LOG file (leave unset)
master_log_pos="" # Master LOG file (leave unset)
mysql_username_admin="root" # Slave MySQL admin username
mysql_password_admin="secret" # Slave MySQL admin pass
With the launch of first-replica.sh
, the file /etc/my.cnf
will be properly
written; if you need to replicate further databases, modify /etc/my.cnf
adding
the following lines related to the db you are replicating (similar to the first
db you’ve replicated):
replicate-do-db=<master_vo_db_name>
replicate-ignore-table=<master_vo_db_name>.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=<master_vo_db_name>.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=<master_vo_db_name>.transactions
replicate-ignore-table=<slave_vo_db_name>.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=<slave_vo_db_name>.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=<slave_vo_db_name>.transactions
Having set the variables in the way shown above, for replicating the first database the scripts launch syntax is the following:
$ ./first_replica.sh --master-db=voms_myvo --db=voms_myvo
In your /etc/my.cnf
file you will find lines like the following:
# Connection with master
server-id=2
master-host=voms.cnaf.infn.it
master-user=bonjovi
master-password=always
# Replicas settings
replicate-do-db=voms_myvo
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.transactions
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=voms_myvo.transactions
Now you may want to replicate a second database, let’s say voms_hervo
:
therefore in my.cnf
file add the following lines:
replicate-do-db=voms_hervo
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.transactions
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.seqnumber
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.realtime
replicate-ignore-table=voms_hervo.transactions
Modify the script next_replicas.sh
in according to the VO parameters and
launch it:
$ ./next_replicas.sh --master-db=voms_hervo --db=voms_hervo
When you finished to replicate all the desired VOs, in order to make active the database modifications, restart voms and voms-admin:
$ /etc/init.d/voms-admin stop
$ /etc/init.d/voms stop
$ /etc/init.d/voms start
$ /etc/init.d/voms-admin start
Keep in mind that every modification done on the slave DB breaks the replica mechanism, so that on this server disable the users registration, by setting the yaim variable:
VOMS_ADMIN_WEB_REGISTRATION_DISABLE=true
And ask the VO managers to not perform any action on the slave server web interface.